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Toxicity Substudy of ESPRIT: TOXIL-2 Substudy - Article


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Clinical Trial: Toxicity Substudy of ESPRIT: TOXIL-2 Substudy

This study is not yet open for patient recruitment.
Verified by The National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research September 2005

Sponsored by: The University of New South Wales
Information provided by: The National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00147355

Purpose

This substudy is an open-label, randomised study comparing the uptake of rIL-2 in HIV-1 infected individuals receiving different combinations of antiemetics and analgesic agents during rIL-2 dosing in ESPRIT. The design is a factorial one with 4 arms, all patients will receive regular ibuprofen and paracetamol from days 1-6 of the rIL-2 dosing cycle in addition, patients will be randomised to receive one of two antiemetic combinations i.e. ondansetron or metoclopramide with or without low dose codeine phosphate as an additional analgesic agent.
Condition Intervention Phase
rIL-2-toxicity
interleukin-2 therapy
HIV
 Drug: Meoclopramide
 Drug: Ondansetron
 Drug: Paracetamol
 Drug: Codeine phosphate
 Drug: ibuprofen
Phase III

MedlinePlus consumer health information 

Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Factorial Assignment, Efficacy Study

Official Title: An Open-Label, Randomised Study Comparing the Uptake of rIL-2 in HIV-1 Infected Individuals Receiving Different Combinations of Antiemetics and Analgesic Agents During rIL-2 Dosing in ESPRIT: Toxicity Substudy of ESPRIT: TOXIL-2 Substudy

Further Study Details: 
Primary Outcomes: The % of planned rIL-2 taken during the first rIL-2 dosing cycle while participating in this substudy. rIL-2 uptake will be assessed at day 1 (day 1 of the dosing cycle of rIL-2) day 5 and day 10 by means of adherance assessment and patient diaries. Info
Secondary Outcomes: - Mean amount of rIL-2 taken during the cycle in million international units (MIU); - Number of cycles initiated during the 6 month period; - Patterns of rIL-2 cycling frequency in the six months after randomisation into the substudy; - Percentage of planned rIL-2 taken during the cycles after the first cycle; - Mean difference in rIL-2 taken during each cycle in the six-month period following randomisation into this substudy and rIL-2 uptake during the last dosing cycle immediately prior to participation in the substudy; - Mean time between receipt of rIL-2 on this substudy and the last dosing cycle of rIL-2 prior to entry into the substudy; - Number of patients with dose modifications during the cycle due to toxicity; - Percentage of patients completing any cycle initiated; - Number of patients with grade 1-4 GI toxicities; - Number of patients with grade 1-4 constitutional upset (defined as any or all of the following: flu-like illness/fever/myalgia/arthalgia/headache); - Number of patients with grade 1-4 oedema and/or other clinical manifestations of capillary leak syndrome eg pulmonary oedema; - Number of patients with 10% weight gain during rIL-2 dosing; - Grade 1-4 creatinine changes during and after rIL-2 dosing; - Grade 1-4 serum sodium changes during and after rIL-2 dosing; - Changes in quality of life during and after rIL-2; - Patterns of use of breakthrough adjunctive therapies; - Safety of adjunctive agents as measured by grade 1-4 toxicity attributed to any of the adjunctive agents; - Incidence of serious adverse events (SAEs) (considered rIL-2-related or related to one of the adjunctive agents) and grade 4 clinical events during and within 8 weeks of the rIL-2 dosing cycle; - CD4+ T-cell count change; - Number of patients indicating willingness to receive further rIL-2 following first rIL-2 cycle; The study visits are screening; baseline (day 1 of the rIL-2 dosing cycle), day 5 of the rIL-2 dosing cycle, day 10 of the rIL-2 dosing cycle and day 60 of the rIL-2 dosing cycle.
Expected Total Enrollment:  168

Study start: September 2005;  Expected completion: December 2007
Last follow-up: September 2007;  Data entry closure: October 2007

The research is a randomised open-label substudy of ESPRIT. The substudy is exploring whether the amount of rIL-2 taken during a dosing cycle of rIL-2 can be increased through controlling the predictable side-effects of rIL-2 better. This is a four arm study with a factorial design; patients will be randomised to one of four arms. Each arm consists of different combinations of adjunctive agents. Each patient will receive paracetamol and ibuprofen prophylactically throughout the cycle, the other adjunctive agents prescribed will vary according to which arm the patient is randomised to, but the antiemetic used will be either ondansetron or metoclopramide with or without low dose codeine phosphate as an additional analgesic agent. The primary end-point is the percentage of planned rIL-2 actually taken during the cycle. Secondary end-points include safety, side-effects of rIL-2 and the adjunctive agents, CD4+ T-cell changes and quality of life measures.

Eligibility

Ages Eligible for Study:  18 Years and above,  Genders Eligible for Study:  Both
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Patients participating in ESPRIT and randomised to the rIL-2 arm, who:

  1. are not at CD4+ T-cell target for the protocol;
  2. have not received rIL-2 for >2 months;
  3. have reported both GI upset and constitutional side-effects as one of the reasons for either dose modifying in prior cycles or unwillingness to receive further rIL-2;
  4. are considered by the Investigator as medically safe to receive further dosing with rIL-2;
  5. are willing to receive further dosing with rIL-2 at the dose specified by the Investigator;
  6. are willing to sign informed consent to participate in the substudy.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. All exclusions for the receipt of rIL-2 on ESPRIT,
  2. Known allergy to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS), opiates, 5HT-3 (serotonin-3) inhibitors, anti-dopaminergic antiemetics, or any other components of the proposed adjunct regimens.
  3. Use of other NSAIDS, cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors, corticosteroids) or opiates analgesics within two weeks of rIL-2 dosing. Use of low dose aspirin as a cardio-protective agent is allowed.

Location and Contact Information

Please refer to this study by ClinicalTrials.gov identifier  NCT00147355

Sarah Pett, M.D      +61 2 9385 0900  Ext. 50909    spett@nchecr.unsw.edu.au
David A Cooper, M.D      +61 2 9385 0900 

Argentina
      Hospital de Clinicas Jose de San Martin, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Maria Lasala, M.D  +54 (11) 59508744    mblasala@fibertel.com.ar 

      Hospital General de Agudos Juan A Fernandez, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Pedro Cahn, M.D  +5411-4981-1828    pcahn@huesped.org.ar 

      Hospital Interzonal General de Agudos Oscar Alende, Mar del Plata,  Argentina
Jorge A Corral, M.D  +54 (223) 494 2114    corralfucks@arnet.com.ar 

      Hospital Prof. Alejandro Posadas, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Hector E Laplume, M.D  +54 (11) 44699300    hlaplume@speedy.com.ar 

      CAICI, Rosario,  Argentina
Sergio Lupo, M.D  +54 (341) 424 8045    sergiolupo@arnet.com.ar 

      Hospital Interzonal de Agudos San Juan de Dios, La Plata,  Argentina
Lucila Massera, M.D  +54 (221) 420 6223    lucilamassera@topmail.com.ar 

      Hospital General de Agudos ''''Teodoro Alvarez'''', Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Arnaldo Casiro, M.D  +54 11 4611 6666    casiroa@fibertel.com.ar 

      Hospital Rawson, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Daniel O David, M.D  +54 351 434 8754    odavid@arnet.com.ar 

      Hospital Central, Mendoza,  Argentina
Victor Bittar, M.D  +54 (261) 4201920    victorbittar@ciudad.com.ar 

      Hospital General de Agudos JM Ramos Mejia, Buenos Aires,  C221,  Argentina
Marcelo H Losso, M.D  +5411-4931-5252    mlosso@hivramos.org.ar 

      Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Waldo Belloso, M.D  +54 (11) 49590393    waldo.belloso@hospitalitaliano.org.ar 

      FUNCEI, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Gustavo Lopardo, M.D  +54 (11) 5236 7772    glopardo@intramed.net.ar 

      Hospital FJ Muniz, Buenos Aires,  Argentina
Jorge Benetucci, M.D  +54 (11) 43060656    fundai@ba.net 

Australia, New South Wales
      St. Vincent''''s Hospital, Sydney,  New South Wales,  2010,  Australia
Sarah L Pett, M.D  +61 2 9385 0900  Ext. 50909    spett@nchecr.unsw.edu.au 
David A Cooper, M.D  +61 2 9385 0900 
Sarah L Pett, M.D,  Principal Investigator

Australia, Queensland
      Nambour Hospital, Nambour,  Queensland,  4560,  Australia
David Sowden  +61 (07) 5476-2489    david_sowden@health.qld.gov.au 

      AIDS Medical Unit, Brisbane,  Queensland,  4002,  Australia
Mark Kelly, M.D  +61 (07) 3224-5525    mark_d_kelly@health.qld.gov.au 
Hugo Ree, M.D  (07) 3224-5526    hugo_ree@health.qld.gov.au 

      Gold Coast Sexual Health Clinic, Miami,  Queensland,  4220,  Australia
John Chuah, M.D  07-5576-9031    chuahj@health.qld.gov.au 

      Cairns Base Hospital, Cairns,  Queensland,  4870,  Australia
Darren Russell, M.D
Kay Haig, M.D  +61 (07) 4050-6205    kay_haig@health.qld.gov.au 

Australia, Victoria
      The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne,  Victoria,  3000,  Australia
Jenny Hoy  +61 (03) 9276-6900    jennifer.hoy@med.monash.edu.au 

      Carlton Clinic, Melbourne,  Victoria,  3000,  Australia
Jonathan Anderson, M.D  +61 (03) 9347-9422    jonathan.anderson@maynemc.com 

Israel
      Kaplan Medical Center, Rehovot,  Israel
Zev Sthoeger, M.D  +972 (8) 944 1444    sthoeger@012.net.il 

Study chairs or principal investigators

Sarah L Pett, M.D,  Principal Investigator,  National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia   

More Information

National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research Homepage

Study ID Numbers:  ESPRIT TOXIL-2 UNSW PSO 6361
Last Updated:  September 6, 2005
Record first received:  September 5, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  NCT00147355
Health Authority: Australia: Department of Health and Ageing Therapeutic Goods Administration; Israel: Israeli Health Ministry Pharmaceutical Administration; Argentina: Administracion Nacional de Medicamentos, Alimentos y Tecnologia Medica; United States: Food and Drug Administration
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-09-13


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